In my opinion, one of the [many] things that has most negatively impacted our society over the past few decades has been the introduction of texting. I think texting has become a kind of emotional crutch that too many folks lean on as a way of avoiding the challenge of engaging in a natural, human-to-human voice conversation, which is important in a healthy society.
In fact, I believe that texting has turned the vast majority of Americans into callous sociopaths who are no longer capable of normal human interaction the way they were before texting was introduced.
Speaking with one another in one-on-one conversations is exactly what we should be doing more of these days, especially during these turbulent times when we are already being forced apart from another by the Neo-Marxist demons who are socially engineering our society.
After all, we are vibratory creatures. Therefore, feeling the "vibes" of the person we are speaking with not only lets us hear what they are saying, but feel it as well. Since voice communication allows us to hear the person with whom we are speaking, we can hear their tone of voice, feel their emotions, perceive their veracity or deceptions, and detect a multitude of other things that we simply aren't able to while we're texting.
Voice communication is not only more efficient and rich in content, it causes our brains to create new neural synapse connections. and improves our overall ability to communicate. It also improves our interpersonal social skills.
Have you ever noticed how people will say things in a text conversation, and treat others in ways that they never would if they were speaking with them during a face-to-face, or on the phone? I certainly have.
Metaphorically, I think that texting allows people to hide behind a sort of an impenetrable shield where nobody can touch them emotionally, because they never have to expose themselves in a complete way, as they would during a voice conversation.
The introduction and proliferation of texting is just one of the many examples of ways in which the post-human New World Order social engineers have managed to separate us from each other since the end of WWII. I suppose it makes sense from their point of view. After all, slave owners always want their slaves to be as isolated (atomized) from one another as possible. Right?
Don't get me wrong. There's a place for texting. It's useful for brief messages that don't justify the need for hearing someone speak (e.g., "Don't forget milk, Honey"). I text people for things like that quite often. However, texting is overly used now, and has now displaced normal voice communications between people who really ought to be talking to one another more, especially when the topics involved are complex or personally meaningful.
I never text anyone under those circumstances, especially when it's just as easy to dial someone's number and talk to them on the phone, or better yet, talk to them on cam. Why? Because I believe that good interpersonal relationships among its People is essential to the happiness and longevity of any society. Don't you?
In fact, I believe that cell phones are something that were intentionally foisted upon humanity in order to divide us, track us, monitor us, and through the proliferation of texting and language reduction, dumb us all down.
Of course, the architects of this high-tech feedlot they call their "New World Order" want to reduce our language to fewer and fewer words (ultimately to just acronyms), until a point is ultimately reached where even our ability to communicate with one another about the scope and nature of our own enslavement will become totally impossible.
After all, what is thought? It's speech internalized. If the people don't have a sufficient inventory of words to use in order to communicate with one another aloud, or any real-life experience doing so (by having meaningful verbal conversations with other people), how can they ever find the words necessary to form cogent thoughts within their own minds?
I can assure you of one thing: we'll never be able to expand our vocabulary or improve our interpersonal communication skills or build rewarding and long-lasting personal relationships with other human beings through the act of texting.
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